Too Poor to Die: The Hidden Realities of Dying in the Margins

Author:   Amy Shea
Publisher:   Rutgers University Press
ISBN:  

9781978843981


Pages:   254
Publication Date:   30 September 2025
Recommended Age:   From 16 to 99 years
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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Too Poor to Die: The Hidden Realities of Dying in the Margins


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Full Product Details

Author:   Amy Shea
Publisher:   Rutgers University Press
Imprint:   Rutgers University Press
Weight:   0.454kg
ISBN:  

9781978843981


ISBN 10:   1978843984
Pages:   254
Publication Date:   30 September 2025
Recommended Age:   From 16 to 99 years
Audience:   General/trade ,  College/higher education ,  Professional and scholarly ,  General ,  Tertiary & Higher Education
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

Table of Contents

Foreword by Jillian Olmsted Introduction           1          Remembering the Forgotten: The Space that Remains                        2          Assaying: On the Anxiety of Positionality                 3          Death by a Thousand Viewings          4          How to Have a Good Death, or, The Dead Grandma Essay                5          The Department of Transitional Assistance: Burial Unit       6          Field Notes of a Tombstone Tourist                           7          On Bodies & Embodiment                 8          Sweet Feet                  9          Deaths of Disparity     10        Rest in Place: Hospice for Unhoused Individuals                                                        11        In Memoriam                                                                                                              12        Indexing the Life & Death Experience of Homelessness | A Poem                 Acknowledgments     Bibliography   Index  

Reviews

""Thoughtful and insightful, and backed up by solid research, Shea's collection of essays comfortably sits at the intersection of the personal and the critical. Too Poor to Die is an important narrative meditation on a difficult topic in American life: the uncertain, overlooked fate of unhoused people facing death."" - Ethan Gildorf (author of Fantasy Freaks and Gaming Geeks) ""An unflinching and illuminating look at subjects that our culture too often sweep under the rug but can no longer afford to ignore. Shea's prose glimmers with creativity, compassion, and intelligence."" - Justin Hocking (author of A Field Guide to the Subterranean) ""Shea deftly examines how our society fails those who live on the margins, both in life and in death. This compassionate and unflinching book will break your heart for the better."" - Beth Winegarner (author of San Francisco's Forgotten Cemeteries: A Buried History) ""Shea explores the political economy of death and its management within a system that cares little for the marginalized and where dying with dignity has become one more human right turned into an expensive luxury. Too Poor to Die blends personal narrative, sociology, and documentary research to draw a portrait of lives on the margins of a society that continually neglects them, even after death. Shea resists any sentimental portraits of poverty, instead honing in on a granular, personal engagement that emphasizes the humanity of those struggling to live and die with dignity. She shows how the act of witnessing can honor the lives of those who might otherwise become yet one more statistic, one more name on a list of the forgotten. Such attentiveness is an act of care that adds urgency to the clear need for rethinking how dying is embedded in living and how dying with dignity requires attention to the lives and living conditions of all."" - David Buuck (author of Noise in the Face of) ""This book is essential reading for anyone wanting or needing to know more about how we can understand and support those who are dying, especially people experiencing poverty. Well researched and personally grounded, these essays are also acts of, and a template for, activism."" - Elizabeth Reeder (author of Microbursts) ""An urgently needed book that challenges many of the end-of-life assumptions that run rampant across the seemingly nonstop death and dying self-help industrial publishing complex. Too few books actually take the time to discuss what actually happens when you die homeless, alone, and without contactable immediate family, let alone how just because a person is homeless doesn't mean they aren't loved, grieved, or missed."" - John Troyer (director of the Centre for Death and Society at the University of Bath) ""Shea cares a great deal about those for whom society tends to care so little. WithToo Poor to Die, she has crafted a poignant and exacting exploration of the intersection between marginal existence and end-of-life care-the embodiment of death-positive thinking and socially conscious research. It's a heart swell and a wake-up call."" - Christopher Notarnicola (contributor, The Best American Essays 2017) ""In her powerful book, Shea captures the many indignities and challenges that the unhoused and disenfranchised individuals among us experience, bringing these into sharp, undeniable focus. She also shares hope, in the form of the many caring people and programs seeking to restore that dignity and, most importantly, among the unhoused and poverty-stricken individuals themselves as they seize their own sources of joy, meaning, and advocacy.""  - Jeannie Meyer (clinical nurse specialist for palliative care at UCLA Health)


""Thoughtful and insightful, and backed up by solid research, Shea's collection of essays comfortably sits at the intersection of the personal and the critical. Too Poor to Die is an important narrative meditation on a difficult topic in American life: the uncertain, overlooked fate of unhoused people facing death."" -- Ethan Gildorf * author of Fantasy Freaks and Gaming Geeks * ""An unflinching and illuminating look at subjects that our culture too often sweep under the rug but can no longer afford to ignore. Shea's prose glimmers with creativity, compassion, and intelligence."" -- Justin Hocking * author of A Field Guide to the Subterranean * ""Shea deftly examines how our society fails those who live on the margins, both in life and in death. This compassionate and unflinching book will break your heart for the better."" -- Beth Winegarner * author of San Francisco's Forgotten Cemeteries: A Buried History * ""Shea explores the political economy of death and its management within a system that cares little for the marginalized and where dying with dignity has become one more human right turned into an expensive luxury. Too Poor to Die blends personal narrative, sociology, and documentary research to draw a portrait of lives on the margins of a society that continually neglects them, even after death. Shea resists any sentimental portraits of poverty, instead honing in on a granular, personal engagement that emphasizes the humanity of those struggling to live and die with dignity. She shows how the act of witnessing can honor the lives of those who might otherwise become yet one more statistic, one more name on a list of the forgotten. Such attentiveness is an act of care that adds urgency to the clear need for rethinking how dying is embedded in living and how dying with dignity requires attention to the lives and living conditions of all."" -- David Buuck * author of Noise in the Face of * ""This book is essential reading for anyone wanting or needing to know more about how we can understand and support those who are dying, especially people experiencing poverty. Well researched and personally grounded, these essays are also acts of, and a template for, activism."" -- Elizabeth Reeder * author of Microbursts * ""An urgently needed book that challenges many of the end-of-life assumptions that run rampant across the seemingly nonstop death and dying self-help industrial publishing complex. Too few books actually take the time to discuss what actually happens when you die homeless, alone, and without contactable immediate family, let alone how just because a person is homeless doesn't mean they aren't loved, grieved, or missed."" -- John Troyer * director of the Centre for Death and Society at the University of Bath * ""Shea cares a great deal about those for whom society tends to care so little. WithToo Poor to Die, she has crafted a poignant and exacting exploration of the intersection between marginal existence and end-of-life care—the embodiment of death-positive thinking and socially conscious research. It's a heart swell and a wake-up call."" -- Christopher Notarnicola * contributor, The Best American Essays 2017 * ""In her powerful book, Shea captures the many indignities and challenges that the unhoused and disenfranchised individuals among us experience, bringing these into sharp, undeniable focus. She also shares hope, in the form of the many caring people and programs seeking to restore that dignity and, most importantly, among the unhoused and poverty-stricken individuals themselves as they seize their own sources of joy, meaning, and advocacy.""  -- Jeannie Meyer * clinical nurse specialist for palliative care at UCLA Health *


Author Information

Amy Shea is the writing program director for Mount Tamalpais College, a college for incarcerated people in San Quentin, CA. Her essays have appeared in The Missouri Review, Portland Review,The Massachusetts Review, the Journal of Sociology of Health & Illness, and others.

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